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tv   Loan Wolves  MSNBC  July 4, 2023 1:00pm-3:00pm PDT

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to achieve the greatest things. - and the doors of higher education will be open to all. - no matter what your circumstances or where you are, you are part of the life of our great nation. - it's one thing all our presidents agree on, each in their own unique way. [patriotic music winds down] - have a good life. we will see you soon. - and to get that good life, all we had to do was follow the instruction manual on how to do the right thing... study hard, be nice to your brother... - get him! - go to college, graduate, and voila, achieve the american dream. but at some point... [clattering] - the us economy shrinking. - they're not getting married. they're not getting homes. they're not getting jobs. - we've been looking at 40 years of flat wages. - those doors to opportunity got harder to open. [light laughter] - this is a big one-- staggering debt
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from student loans. - today, that old instruction manual feels like false advertising. - the system is unfair. we tell young people to go to college. they have to take out loans in order to graduate. and now they're punished for it. - for doing the right thing, borrowing money for the right reason-- higher education. [tense music] - this is a story about how our basic bargain was broken by greed and politics. - there was two lines slipped in under the dark of night. - it wasn't until it was all over, you look back and say, oh, my god, two lines in the bill changed the lives of millions of americans. - and my personal journey to uncover how student debt crushed the american dream. - this lending system has now catastrophically failed. - this thing has just spun out of control. - i see you've got a whip in your hand. - this is not a whip. it's a flogger. - oh, okay. and who was secretly behind it. - we are trying to figure out where it came from. - who? - nobody put their name on this one. - unraveling this political scandal would require listening...
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- adults tell you, you have to go to college. - i did what i was supposed to do. - and it feels like somebody lied to you somewhere along the way. - traveling the country... - glad you showed up, man. - tremendous focus... [whimsical chords] and steely determination. - it is a problem. did congress even know what it was doing? - it's keeping me up at night. - this was a legislatively manufactured crisis. - this is a scam. - it's the greatest robbery in modern american life. [moody, heavy chords] ♪ [punchy music] - so how did this whole long saga begin? i worked for years in politics and journalism... - here's blake zeff. he's a politics editor at salon.com. - and buzzfeed contributor blake zeff. - he's a washington insider who's worked for president obama. - blake, what can the president do on guns to give himself a point in the history books? - well, i'll tell you the first thing is... but behind the confident demeanor
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and ill-fitting sport jackets, i had a secret. my wife patty and i were almost $200,000 in debt. [baby cooing] what are you doing right now? - i'm going to pay my loans. i just got notice that they're due. - that's patty. like all of us, patty has made a lot of decisions in life, and maybe not all of them showed great judgment. but deciding to become a psychologist to help veterans with ptsd seemed like a good one. - with graduate school, i thought, i'm going to graduate and be a doctor. i'll get a good job and make a lot of money and pay those off in no time. but i didn't understand that pretty much every penny i earned was going to be going to my student loans. i feel like i'm never going to catch up. - with four separate loans, our total payment each month was nearly $2,000. but this isn't just about the numbers. - the loan companies are certainly evil and, you know, pull things all the time.
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like, i was getting messages saying that i was delinquent in a student loan, and i wasn't. they make it really confusing. like, every month, i have to read everything really thoroughly because i'm always suspicious that there's going to be some sort of hidden fee. - this whole system seemed really sketchy. - i feel like one of the lucky ones because i'm able to make my payments. but for some people with busier or harder lives than we have, it's so much worse. - eventually, patty had to leave the va hospital and go into private practice just so we could keep up with the payments. - and it'll affect all of our kids, you know? none of us are saving for our kids' futures. you know, i thought about like, maybe it wasn't a great idea to have him. but i don't know. fuck it. he's really cute. right? - and we're lucky. we have good jobs and so many advantages in life. - get some scholarships, kid. - but what about the 45 million other americans with student debt?
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the news coverage was not encouraging. - student loan debt in this country is now bigger than credit card debt. - and what does it do? it not only hurts these students. that's our number one concern. it kills the whole economy. - they're delaying having kids. they're delaying getting married. they're delaying buying houses. - i think it's a crisis right now for families and student borrowers. - it wasn't just the borrowers. economists and pundits across the political spectrum were warning this could have drastic effects on our economy. - for that is the student loan bubble. - yeah, even him. - down to $1.5 trillion and counting. - crushing student debt. - was there a story here? to find out, i did what any good journalist would. i googled it in the middle of the night. every opinion column, every quote in a news story, all came down to the same one expert, alan collinge-- one of the nation's foremost experts on student debt. this guy was everywhere... except an easy-to-visit location. [light music]
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♪ alan? - hey, man, watch your step. - yes. what is this, an ice storm? - pretty much. welcome to wisconsin. north woods. - thank you very much. - i hope you like cats. - uh... - they're friendly. - oh, yeah, i can smell them. - you know, i sprayed lysol, but i don't think it worked. - so you've basically devoted your life to this problem. - i'm very sorry to say that appears to be how it turned out. it's become a 17-year ordeal, a journey. - after accruing hundreds of thousands in student debt, alan became obsessed with the issue. and before it was on the media's radar, he made raising awareness of it his life's work. but it turns out, trying to change an entire financial system can be a lonely fight.
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this is your family? - this is my family. yep. - were they aware of the work you were doing? your parents? - yeah. i like to think my parents instilled in me the spirit of the happy warrior. it helps me keep my chin up during some of the low times during this battle. - what would you say to this kid as you look at this younger version of yourself? - oh, that's actually my brother, believe it or not. - oh, okay. that's you? - uh, that's also my brother. - alan's devotion to this issue meant giving up a lot. - when i first started this, i had a good job in the defense industry. i had health care. i had a house. i had many things. i have none of those things today because i decided that the most useful thing that i could be doing with my life was fighting this battle. the lenders pull out all the stops against our best and brightest for the crime of going to college. this lending system has now catastrophically failed.
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it's galactically failed by all rational metrics and measures. we now owe close to $2 trillion in federal student loan debt. and you know, it seems like nobody's really even paying any attention to it, so... - whoa. there was definitely a story here. but was alan right about its magnitude and that no one was doing anything about it? - we're just gonna have to clear this whole area out, both tires. - it all seemed so outrageous. - glad you showed up, man. - sure. and honestly, so did alan. meet jerome. he's the chair of the federal reserve, which is a fancy way of saying his job is to make sure the economy doesn't suck. a republican appointee, jerome is not known for his bleeding heart
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or stirring oratory. - we're not on a sustainable fiscal path. we need to get on one. - but on student debt, jerome has been surprisingly forthcoming. - in your view, does the high level of student debt create a drag on the economy? - as student loan continues to grow and becomes larger and larger, then it absolutely could hold back growth. - that's the key. it's hard to tell from his jerome-like delivery, but "hold back growth" is literally his nightmare scenario. - if our college debt were a country, it would be the eighth wealthiest country in the world. - this is kevin connell. after falling into almost $100,000 of student debt of his own, he wrote two books exposing the corruption of the student debt system, all by the time he was just 21. in one word, how would you describe the student debt system? - predatory. - why? - because of the conditioning students face their entire lives, saying you must go to college in order to be successful. people are willing to pay whatever it takes to go to college.
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- and prominent economists agree. as an economist, the prominent economist that you are... - shoot me up good. [overlapping chatter] - get it! the prominent economist that you are, how big of a problem would you say this is? - oh, it's an immoral problem. we impose this upon our young people. it's a narrative where we tell them, go to school, better yourself. college is the key to your mobility. but as a young person, 17, 18 years old, are they making an authentic choice? - well, i feel like i've done everything right. growing up, you know, i'm being told, go to school, work hard, you can do whatever you want, and you can have whatever you want. and it's kinda like, okay, um... you know, i'm 31. what happened here? - i talked to people from different communities across the country to see how student debt had affected them. - adults would tell you... you have to go to college. like, a college degree would mean getting a good-paying job. and then you buy a house and you live the life that you want. you know, it seems silly to imagine that now.
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- i served eight years in the united states air force. and it's kind of like, i did what i was supposed to do. i contributed to my country. and yet, student loans put me in debt that i thought would be avoided by joining the military. - they all did what they were supposed to and thought they were achieving the american dream. what does the american dream mean to you? is that a thing? - the american dream now is to have zero dollars, for a lot of people. i mean, so many people have negative net worth. - but if you can't reach that american dream of having zero dollars, don't worry. the media has your back. - almost 1/3 of all college students are using their student loans to pay for their spring break trips. - it's important for them to learn this lesson early on of personal responsibility. - pull yourselves up by your bootstraps. - these are adults we're talking about. and they need to realize that when they take out debt that they are liable to repay that debt. - someone might say, listen, you took out a loan. you pay it back. it's simple. like, don't be irresponsible. what do you say to that?
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- i think i would have said that totally makes sense eight years ago when i was 17. - let's not forget. these are kids being told to sign on the dotted line. no parental consent necessary. - my 17-year-old self was very unprepared for all of those details. - but some in the media say that's no excuse. - the students knew exactly what they were getting into. - you knew what you were getting into. when someone says that, they don't get it. - most people don't know what they're actually signing up for. there's a whole series of gimmicks played in the industry that attempt to cloud what the actual picture looks like. - the lenders become very creative in how they can inflate a loan. - what they do is, they give you the teaser rate to start. it's artificially low. - that's right. college lenders are using the classic "first one's free" move, used on everything from streaming services to cocaine-- or so i'm told. but that's not the only trick up their sleeve. - it's a lot of fine print. it's overwhelming.
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- maybe you make an underpayment one month, and they pyramid your fees until you don't notice. - if you end up defaulting, your wages can be garnished. they can come in and just say, nope. we're taking 15% of your wages without any sort of due process at all. they do the same thing with social security. - so if you're a teenager signing the papers, why don't you listen to the adults in the room who were there to guide you? remember your guidance counselor, how they reeked of coffee and pretended to know your name? - i truly don't think guidance counselors, my parents, family, i don't know anyone that understood the true detriment. - okay, blake, come and bring me that banana. stick the banana right in between the foot. - like this? - yes. position at the other way. - oh. like this? - right. but make sure there's nothing else in the background, that you just see feet and banana. - how's that? okay, this is not exactly what it looks like.
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sleepovers just aren't what they used to be. ba house full of screens? basically no hiccups? you guys have no idea how good you've got it. how old are you? like, 80? back in my day, it was scary stories and flashlights. we don't get scared. oh, really? mom can see your search history. that's what i thought. introducing the next generation 10g network. only from xfinity. we moved out of the city so our little sophie could appreciate nature.
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but then he got us t-mobile home internet. i was just trying to improve our signal, so some of the trees had to go. i might've taken it a step too far. (chainsaw revs) (tree crashes) (chainsaw continues) (daughter screams) let's pretend for a second that you didn't let down your entire family. what would that reality look like? well i guess i would've gotten us xfinity... and we'd have a better view. do you need mulch? what, we have a ton of mulch. the real reason i came to see marcella?eral ton. her daughter's student debtve was so out of control mulch. she was running an active business creating erotic videos to help pay it off. - every day i wake up, the purpose of my day is to make sure my children have a better life. with my oldest daughter, i did prepare for the first four years of college with her. i started when she was in kindergarten. i was very young when i had her. i did not know she was going to go on for her masters. i wasn't prepared for that. i did not know she was gonna want to go to law school.
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but when she told me about it, i just encouraged her. yes, okay, great. what do you need to do? - what marcella's daughter needed to do was take out a $46,000 loan. - i'm trying to work as hard as i can. because then after she finishes, it's gonna be over $200,000. - wait a minute. marcella started out with a $46,000 loan and now it's $200,000? - most of my salary is going into paying off my student loans right now. but even with that, after four years of residency, i'm gonna basically be in $50,000 more debt. - i've talked to people where they say, i've been paying my student loans for years. i've been making all my payments. i've been doing it on time. and yet, i owe more now than i did at the beginning. what is that? - that is the phenomenon of compounding interest. - okay, let's stop here for a second, because compounding interest can be pretty tricky to understand. here's what you need to know.
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while most loans make you pay a small amount of interest, compounding interest charges you interest on interest, making your balance grow exponentially and quickly get out of control. - if i were the only person with student debt, i may say, you know, gosh, i really messed up here. but then when it gets to, like, 45 million people, you're like, okay, maybe this is systemic. maybe this isn't just a couple of people who made bad decisions. maybe this is actually an orchestrated scam. - i'm convinced that the system was rigged to create the very crisis that we're in today. - that's when i learned about a piece of this puzzle that got very little attention but would change everything. if you could point to one thing about the student debt system, one thing you would change, what would it be? - bankruptcy. - what do you mean? - it is for all intents, impossible to discharge student loans in bankruptcy.
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- wait, i thought that all debts could be discharged in bankruptcy. - except for student loans. in 1998, they essentially took bankruptcy protections permanently away for all time from federal student loans. - could this be true? and isn't bankruptcy a bad thing? i think the first time i heard the word "bankrupt" was from watching "wheel of fortune." the audience goes, aw, and you lose all your money. and i just assumed that's something i don't want. - well, i've had many clients, post-bankruptcy, go on to buy houses, which they've never been able to do. i've had two clients actually become multimillionaires. - how hard would it be for me to discharge my student loan debt through bankruptcy? - it's impossible. - i guess bankruptcy is reserved only for the truly neediest cases. all right, to be fair, they do deserve a fresh start... mostly.
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but student borrowers deserve that option too. now that doesn't mean everyone's going to run out and file bankruptcy, or that they even should. there's something much bigger at play here. - in the absence of the threat of bankruptcy, you open the door for widespread abuse by the lenders. - without bankruptcy as an option, college lenders now frivolously lend out as much money as they can to anybody who wants to apply because repayment is guaranteed. it's up to the student to pay it back no matter what. there is no bankruptcy option. - the lenders know you can't run, you can't hide. so this essentially gives them a license to steal. - when lenders have no incentives to restrict who they're lending to or how much to loan out, guess what happens to tuition costs? - the colleges raised their price, essentially at will. - and you're paying for it. and college lenders know that. so the more obscene the tuition, and the more ridiculous the gimmicks that colleges play,
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the richer college lenders become. - so just having the threat of bankruptcy forces the lenders to behave rationally and with a modicum of good faith. - and without those bankruptcy protections, we're left with a self-perpetuating system of greed. - you know, from the outset, this was a legislatively manufactured crisis. - it was the 1998 reauthorization of the higher education act. - the senate will now vote on the adoption of the conference report accompanying hr-6. - mr. biden, mr. bingaman, mr. durbin, mr. feingold, mrs. feinstein, mr. ford... - was there, like, an uproar when this happened? was this, like, a big headline at the time? - there was no headline. in fact, i don't think most congressmen even knew that it happened until probably weeks, months, or maybe even years afterwards. - the bill i will sign in a few moments will enhance the economic strength of america.
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- they did this massive change to the economy that would affect all these people, and no one noticed? - it was very sneaky what they did. it was two lines slipped in, in conference committee under the dark of night. - there it is... the two lines of legal mumbo jumbo that would alter the economy for multiple generations, almost entirely. - technically, the bankruptcy code says if it represents an undue hardship, you can get a discharge. - undue hardship? [chuckles] that shouldn't be too hard to prove. - well, the courts have interpreted that saying that means there's no hope of repaying. - what do you mean there's supposed to be no hope? - they have to have such a condition you'd never want to have to get the student loan discharged. - what do you mean? what kind of condition? - well, they might have serious cancer, physical disabilities. - so let me understand this. the way to get rid of student debt right now is to have cancer? that's probably the best way?
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- well, unfortunately, that would be a help. - okay. who is responsible for this craziness? - there's no name that i can find attached to who did it. nobody seems to be willing to step up and take the credit for it. - wait, wait, wait. nobody put their name to it? we don't--we don't actually know who did this? - no. it's like a whisper in the wind. i don't know. - this is something that bears repeating. according to alan, everything from ballooning student debt to spiraling college costs can be traced back to this one, two-line provision in a 1998 law. and no one knows who's responsible for it. what? - i would like to know who slipped these two lines into that bill that took bankruptcy uniquely away. i think that is the $2 trillion question. and i think that person needs to do something to make good. - we now had a whodunit on our hands and a mission right in my wheelhouse.
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i would find and confront the person responsible and demand they help me get this disastrous law changed. ♪ limu emu & doug ♪ what do we always say, son? liberty mutual customizes your car insurance... so you only pay for what you need. that's my boy. now you get out there, and you make us proud, huh? ♪ bye, uncle limu. ♪ stay off the freeways! only pay for what you need. ♪ liberty. liberty. liberty. liberty. ♪ this is remington. he's a member of the family, for sure. we always fed him kibble it just seemed like the thing to do. but he was getting picky, and we started noticing some allergy symptoms. we heard about the farmer's dog and it was a complete transformation. his allergies were going away and he just had amazing energy. it's a no-brainer that remi should have
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that would mean going back to when the fateful provision and soothe occasional bloating gas and discomfort. was passed. align probiotic. the year was 1998.
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- the yankees have done it again. - the yankees had just won the world series. john glenn had just returned to space... - nbc's science correspondent... - and an important scientific breakthrough was just announced. - mike byerly was one of the more than 4,000 men who volunteered for the trials of the anti-impotence drug called viagra. he was very satisfied with the results. - speaking of tireless stallions who just won't slow down... - steve kornacki, who has gotten some rest, is back at the big board tonight. - msnbc's steve kornacki is not just the master of the election night big board or a khaki pants icon. he's also an expert in '90s politics. - good to see you. cheers. - hey, any time, blake. maybe he'd have some clues for me. this--this bill was signed in by clinton in october of '98. what's going on in his world at that time? - so bill clinton wanted to get things done in 1998. i mean, every president wants to get things done. but bill clinton had a particular imperative to because of impeachment. the clinton strategy in 1998 was to say,
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this whole thing with monica lewinsky was a personal thing. and what i'm trying to do as president is the business of the people. he was doing the business of the american people as everybody else in the political world was focused on his personal life. - okay. pretty good headlines, right, like, "clinton signs a higher education bill." it sounds like clinton just wanted to have a nice happy press release so he could change the topic a little bit instead of talking about the problems he's having. - yeah, and i think that the second piece of it is bipartisan, because it wasn't just looming impeachment. the other thing that he was facing was the midterm election a month later. and those things were linked. - right. - so the idea that a month before the election you could sign a bipartisan piece of legislation, just the optics of that, as they say, right, are going to look good to a lot of people on both sides. - right. okay. do you, expert, 1990's politics guy, steve kornacki, have any guess or insight into who might have inserted this provision into that 1998 bill,
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because we're trying to figure this out? could you even hazard a guess? - i have no idea. but i think you're asking a good question-- how did we get here? - yeah. - because it was not on anybody's radar back then. - even '90s politics expert steve kornacki doesn't know? well, in his defense... be honest with me. is it hard to describe things without the use of a big board? - [laughs] it's freeing. i like the air outside the studio a little bit, too, i think, you know? - maybe i just needed to talk to someone who was in the room when the bill was written. a longtime aid to ted kennedy... - hey, how are you? - jane actually helped write the bill. are you ready to talk about the 1998 higher education act? - wow. am i? - surely she could point me to who did it. - it'll be fun. - i can't guarantee that. please don't put that kind of pressure on me. so there must have been a lot of good stuff in this bill because it passed unanimously. what are some of the highlights about the bill that you're maybe most proud of?
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- so i love title ii. i mean, as a recovering teacher myself... - jane's going to get pretty deep into technical jargon here. - and we thought sfa should be a pbo. - but the takeaway is that there were a lot of programs that helped teachers... - additional professional development... - and kids. and they were smart about a bunch of things. - in 1998, nobody was thinking about distance learning. - but... all right, i'm gonna ask you about one particular provision that some feel has not aged well. - okay. - okay? two lines were inserted into that multi-hundred-page bill that made it so that federal student loans cannot be discharged through bankruptcy, making it basically one of the only debts that you cannot get rid of through bankruptcy. - so now you're going to get into the weeds of the sausage-making that is legislation. you know, you have to separate sometimes, when you're working on the hill, this is what i feel personally, and this is what i have to do as part of my job. personally, i think it's-- it's crazy
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that you can't discharge your student loans. i mean, i think it was something that was pushed out of control by somebody's misperception. - any idea who did it? - i don't know who, so i don't want to pretend i know. some member had an idea that there was fraud and bad acting going on, that people were just going to school and racking up debt and living high on the hog on the loan program. look, the reality is... - this may sound crazy, but it's true. in the '70s, a formal study was commissioned to see if people were gaming the system and recklessly declaring bankruptcy to avoid paying their student loans. but what the study found was that less than 1% of borrowers, or virtually no one, was actually doing this. if we were to try to find the person who was behind it, do you have any leads or tips? or where would you go if you were me? where would you start this process? - i don't know that anybody would take ownership of this.
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i mean, nobody put their name on this one, right? so whoever was doing it at the time did not want to have center stage. and i bet--i mean, i couldn't even give you a hint. - got it. this mystery person really seemed to be hiding. - mr. speaker, i yield one minute to the distinguished gentleman from new york, mr. weiner. - one thing working in politics taught me is that politicians usually don't shy away from attention. - sit down! - [auctioneering] - but no one was taking credit for the bankruptcy exception in the 1998 education bill. and it was easy to see why through a very weird exercise i subjected poor dave to. all right, dave, i'm going to name two different types of debts. okay? and you're going to tell me which one is easier to discharge through bankruptcy. are you up for like, a lightning round
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kind of thing here? - sure. - so please turn this way. world's saddest gameshow! we'll put some time on the clock, and here we go. unpaid taxes or student loans? - unpaid taxes. - business debts or student loans? - business debts. - bad checks or student loans? - bad checks. - car accident claims or student loans? - car accident claims. - credit cards or student loans? - credit cards. - gambling debts or student loans? - gambling debts. - excessive shopping or student loans? - excessive shopping. - collection agency accounts or student loans? - collection agency accounts. [buzzer] - thank you for playing. - [laughs] i hope i-- i hoped i passed the audition. - i mean, that's pretty telling, though, right? - yeah. - it's everything but student loans. - it's insane. and that's why there are so many people suffering. it's making people into debt-- indentured servants.
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[mellow twangy music] ♪ - this is where i reached probably the darkest moment in my life. it's a parking lot of a cheap hotel. it was 11 years ago. - i met scott, whose debt story began 20 years ago when he achieved his lifelong dream of becoming a teacher. - i love being a teacher. it is very fulfilling. but i didn't make enough money to make my student loan payments. i started out with a $35,000 loan. somehow i now owe $150,000. i couldn't provide for my family the way they deserved me to provide for them. that really, really, really screwed with my head to where i just felt like an utter and complete failure. [apprehensive music] i remember thinking it was like being in the water after you fell off a boat, and you're treading water
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and treading water, and boats keep going by, and you keep thinking, maybe this boat will throw me a lifeline and i'll be all right. and then every time, the boat just kept going. and i remember thinking, how long... how long can i tread water before i drown? that's when i really started to think about taking my own life. eventually, i called my wife. and she reminded me that the kids need me and they loved me. i'd like to think that i found courage at that point, and i started to feel hopeful because i realized, i just have to accept that this debt is probably never going to go away. you just have to learn how to live anyway. you just have to keep going. i almost didn't. ♪
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you've been ordering from chewy. we are very proud of you. you never stop surprising us, bailey. right? i'm great. you are great. i wonder if bailey's ever done a book report. be nice to your sister. what flea bit him? pets aren't just pets. they're more. this flea and tick season, trust america's #1 pet pharmacy. chewy. trust america's #1 pet pharmacy. - i think it's important that people be able to borrow to make what may be the most important investment of their lives, which is in their education. - remember this guy? [tape rewinding] we don't allow student loan debt to be discharged in bankruptcy. - right. - i'd be at a loss to-- to explain why that should be the case.
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- okay, let me translate that wonky comment into english for you. - we don't allow student loan debt to be discharged in bankruptcy. - right. - i'd be at a loss to-- to explain why that should be the case. [upbeat percussive music] - was this even good lawmaking? - nice to see you. - ari melber is msnbc's chief legal correspondent. though sometimes it seems he has a different beat entirely. - no greater authority than jay-z saw "99 problems" when he says, "my glove compartment's locked. "so is the trunk in the back. i know my rights. you're going to need a warrant for that." there's no such thing as halfway crooks. we know that truth from the great poet havoc of mobb deep. and if you get really good campaign finance reform, maybe money ain't a thing because it won't be a thing. - 100%. - yeah. although i don't like it if it don't bling bling. - okay. - so if you have a law that says
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virtually anyone in the country can file for bankruptcy and get rid of their debts, anyone, except for one group of people, people who have student loans, that seems to me... messed up would be my term of art for that. - to me as a lawyer, i look at it and say, if bankruptcy is available for all these other groups so that they can go on and be, "productive," if it's available for corporations or private bankers and business people, why wouldn't it be available to a nurse? - i'm--it's keeping me up at night. i'm just trying to like unpack it. it seems like it's part of 1,000-page bill. you have these two lines, right? crazy enough though, there's two words, "undue," "hardship." they basically say, okay, you can discharge these debts through bankruptcy if you can show that you have undue hardship from your loans. i'm gonna tell you right now. i've been talking with people around the country, they all pretty much think that they have undue hardship. no one's like, this hardship is due, right? that seems so vague almost as to be rendered meaningless. is that... - whether or not people can get the same benefit that a random anonymous corporation that might contribute less to society than a nurse... - right. - that's a decision that i think is subject
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to the politics and the power at the time that decision was made. do people want to reopen that? i mean, i know that's what you're looking at. i think that's a very fair question to reopen. [inquisitive music] - but in order to reopen it, i needed to understand how this little-noticed but massive change happened in the first place. i needed my own deep throat-- or you know, something that sounds less gross. - so this is what you learn in school is, the house and the senate have to pass the exact same version of the bill for it to become law. so you know, when you go back to the beginning and look at this... - so i called in a favor. - the house does its version. senate does its version. then send it back down to the house. - so that's a new bill they're sending? - right, so... - this is ryan mcconaghy, a top policy advisor from my days on capitol hill. and no one in d.c. knows more about how a bill becomes a law than him. - conference committee--and then, when we're at this point in the line, you loop back... - but it quickly became clear
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that this was really complicated. - back to the senate. - oh, lord. - then you head up here to the white house to get signed into law. - all right. you could see why this would be a little hard to follow or confusing for anyone who doesn't work in congress for a living. i mean, it's three, five, eight steps at least right here. so the provision that we're talking about that basically said you can't get rid of your student loans to bankruptcy, when do you start to notice it? - so actually, the first place a mention of it pops up is actually back here in this little detour to the rules committee. - okay. what does that suggest? - that suggests it was part of a manager's amendment, which include smaller things that individual members want that just aren't worth the time to debate because they're pretty non-controversial. - i see, so this is where you could kind of slip something in without a ton of public discussion, without as much attention. - yes. - this was a big step. now we knew when it came in and that it was slipped in where it was less likely to be noticed. this enabled ryan to come up with three top suspects.
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- this is chairman of the committee, sponsor of the manager's amendment, bill goodling. technically, the manager's amendment where this first pops up is under his name. - so the first time we see any mention of this provision is in the manager's amendment. and he controls that amendment? - right. it doesn't necessarily mean it's his thing. - it's not a smoking gun. but obviously... - he would have been in a position to make it happen. - yeah. making this one of the most interesting things bill goodling's ever done. - thing keeps popping out of my ears. - a moderate republican from pennsylvania, he was a former superintendent who is known for being great with money. [cash register dings] - [laughs] - next is buck mckeon. representative mckeon was the chairman of the higher education subcommittee. so he would have been the first crack at the bill. he would have had to plausibly be aware of what was in the manager's amendment. - he even kind of looks like he is happy he got away with something. - [laughs] - oh, i knew buck. not only was the california republican on the higher education subcommittee,
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he also became chair of the powerful armed services committee... - i think we would rather have our enemies die than our troops. - where he was such a good friend to defense contractors, he developed a lovely reputation. - third name, senator jeffords. senator jeffords was the chairman of the senate help committee, which is in charge of higher education. - jim jeffords, best known for switching parties in 2001 and swinging control of the senate to the democrats, as well as for being part of the hottest act to ever grace a stage. all: ♪ every heart beats true ♪ for the red, white, and blue ♪ ♪ where there's never a boast or brag ♪ - he is actually on record talking about this provision at the very end of the process. and he acknowledges that some people are disappointed that it's in the bill, but that it was needed to help pay for the overall cost of the bill. - wait, jeffords says that? - jeffords says this. - so he's basically defending the bill publicly? - he is defending the bill, and he's acknowledging that there's some agita about this.
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but he's--he's at least okay with it. - all right. thank you. now we have a place to at least start this. - yep. - all right, and so... [brass music playing] do you hear that music out there? ♪ (vo) this is sadie, she's on verizon. the network she can count on. and now she has myplan, the game-changing new plan that lets her get exactly what she wants and save on every perk. sadie is moving to the big city and making moves on her plan, too. apple one, on. now she's got plenty of entertainment for the whole ride. finally there! hot spot, on. and she's fully connected before her internet is even installed. (sadie) hi, mom! (mom) how's the apartment? (vo) introducing myplan. get exactly what you want, only pay for what you need. act now and get it for $25 when you bring your phones. it's your verizon. [music playing] subject 1: cancer is a long journey. it's overwhelming, but you just have to put your mind to it and fight.
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is is a funny coincidence. we were doing an interview about student debt for a documentary, and look what we see.
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this is a crazy coincidence. we're shooting a documentary about student debt. so what... [music blaring] can you have them stop for a sec? guys? tell me, guys, what are you here for? what's your--what's your cause? who are you? what's going on? - we are the 45 million. and we're an organization that's working to cancel student loan debt. - yeah. - while i've been focused on the bankruptcy issue, another fix was gaining even more momentum. - president biden said he's willing to forgive $10,000 in student loans. - as a candidate, joe biden issued a plan that some in his party felt didn't go far enough. - we have proposed debt cancellation for up to $50,000. - still others wanted more. - president biden can take a pen, sign a piece of paper, and cancel all the federal student loan debt. - who here has student debt? - how much do you have? - too much. - too much. - 200,000. - i have 40,000, and i haven't even graduated yet. - and you haven't even graduated yet? - yeah. - i got about 140,000.
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- wow. - how do you invest in a future when you're constantly paying for the past? - yeah. all: [chanting] cancel student debt. cancel student debt. - but not everyone in the media was singing the same tune. - does a debt hop on the back of a unicorn and fly away? - if we're just willing to cancel student loan debt like you mentioned, why can't we just cancel the credit card debt? - student loan bailout, it's not going to teach the students fiscal responsibility. - why should i have to pay for my neighbor's dumb daughter? - okay, at this point, it may be worth clarifying some things about student debt cancellation. - i mean, somebody is going to have to pay this money back. - because there's a lot of people confusing the issue. - shirking responsibility off of our backs into the backs of taxpayers. - canceling debt does not mean that taxpayers are picking up the tab or that anyone is paying for your neighbor's "dumb daughter," as our friend here would say. - uh-uh! - are the taxpayers going to have to pay a debt back? no. i mean, one thing we misconstrue
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about the federal budget is that it's zero sum. it's not. the federal government diverts resources to different sectors of the economy based on the decisions they make. - with student debt canceled, the money that would have gone straight to the government instead flows out into the economy. think of it as a stimulus, like the ppp loans. - these are loans that turn into grants. you use this to pay your workers. we want you to have a business that you can reopen quickly. - most of those loans will never be paid back. - how do we always have funding for things that are deemed too big to fail, but people, the american citizens are not considered too big to fail? when i can't do something for my home or my family, it impacts my community, because that's less money going into my community. - so by canceling the debt, they are putting resources in the hands of young people, which will not only facilitate their own well-being, but it will facilitate ingenuity. - there are a lot of students who come to my office hours
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who say, i'm really passionate about x. but i'm not gonna do that because it doesn't pay. i'm gonna graduate with so much debt, i should probably just take a job where i'm guaranteed to make money. when you're constantly thinking about the price tag, and you can't think about the passion, that's where something has gone wrong. - professor greer had a good point. thanks to student debt, millions of adults are prevented from contributing to society for financial reasons. - my mom actually passed away from cancer. and so i want to be able to do what other physicians have done for my family and be there for patients. - vivian grew up in a low-income neighborhood in new york city. she worked extremely hard and got into a top medical school with the dream of giving back to her community. - i want to be working in those low-resource hospitals and clinics. and that's where, like, my heart has always been. but when i'm looking at potential jobs
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for after i finish my residency, i have to consider, with this salary, can i actually pay off my loans? can i afford to take that job that would be more fulfilling, that would be a public service? i want to be able to help, and my hands are tied. - vivian just wants to give back to society. but some in the media see it differently. - this is a giveaway to millennials who have had their parents and family and society pay for their bad decisions for their entire life. - i'm so tired of hearing somebody say, well, i've spent $80,000 on-- i got 75,000 of that in student debt. then go get a job. - the more i looked into this, the more clear it became that this issue often caused a stir because politicians and the media hate millennials. - toughen up, and don't run to your safe space every time someone says something you disagree with. - in fact, they seem to blame them for almost everything? - 40% of millennials don't eat cereal anymore
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because it takes too much time to clean up. - dallas police department facing a staff shortage, and the chief says millennials are to blame. - experts say millennials are also to blame for the decline of casual dining venues. - um, millennials really killed casual dining? - i mean, we do like chipotle, i think. but doesn't everyone? - this is a real-life millennial. - what--what do the older generations get wrong about millennials? - oh, my gosh, everything. [laughs] i think people associate, like, the millennial generation with like, young people. and it's like, "shit, i have gray hair." can i say shit? i don't know. - we got to cancel this whole thing. - okay. i don't know what-- - she just-- - [laughs] - behind that offensive, despicable foul mouth is a tireless researcher who wrote a book about millennials so she could figure out what the fuck was going on with her generation. - i think the older generation see us as being entitled and narcissistic. you know, okay. i get it. like, i probably am one of those millennials who,
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like, have way too much education and complain about the world too much. i mean, we are overeducated, but that's not necessarily paying off in the same way that it paid off for them. and i don't want to take away from, like, our parents and our grandparents who've lived through wars, but-- - take away from them. - i mean, we grew up with not only 9/11. we--i, you know, graduated and there was a recession. and then there was a recession again. and at the same time, we're still being sold the same american dream that our parents you know, were told, where, like, you know, just to get ahead, just work hard enough. and like, that's just not good enough anymore. - the older generation is saying, well, i paid for college. it's like, right. college was $2,000 a year. right? now it's set in that $50,000 to $65,000 range. you haven't bought a book yet. - many have characterized this as just a millennial or gen z issue. and in fact, the fastest- growing constituency of those who owe student debt are 50-plus.
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- that's congresswoman ayanna pressley. she wanted to clear up some misconceptions about who's really affected by student debt. - within my district, i have senior citizens living on fixed incomes, 76 years old, still paying on student loans. it's an economic justice issue. it's a gender justice issue in that women disproportionately bear the burden. and black student borrowers are five times more likely to default on their loans than our white peers. so it's a racial justice issue. - i think especially black americans have been told, the way to achieve the american dream, like, education is the way for a leg up if you want to acquire social capital, if you want to make more money. - if you want to see success in america as a person of color, go to school. and we are doing that. but we've started out behind. we still get job discrimination. you know, we still get denied for mortgages at higher rates. so i think, you know, being a black millennial means that we get all the shit-- can i say shit?
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i still don't know. - well, you keep doing it, so-- - i know. - just--i don't know. like, can we... that reminds me. who the fuck was responsible for the obliteration of the american dream? i needed to get back to our whodunit and narrow down our suspects. [intriguing music] i got a mysterious call from kevin saying he had some high-level intel regarding my mission. i asked him to meet me by the washington monument. kevin? you know, to add to the intrigue. my man. you have a lead for me? - i think it was buck mckeon. - how sure are you? - all evidence points in his direction. out of anybody in congress, mckeon had the best motive. between his committee assignments and the fact that he was the recipient of thousands of dollars in campaign contributions from major college lending companies. he had a lot to gain personally
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by supporting key legislation on their behalf. - how did you uncover this stuff? - it's all public records, so you can go in and see he was the primary sponsor, not just a co-sponsor, but the primary sponsor of the bill. and so you start connecting the dots of, where is the money coming from? and what are the motives for paying him that money? and it's a perfect fit. but the real key to me is, he also sponsored the legislation that helped privatize sallie mae, one of the largest student lenders in the country. at the end of the day, it's kind of like looking for a serial killer, right? the same guy keeps showing up at different crime scenes. and eventually, the mystery is taken out of it. we've got our guy. good luck. - thank you, man. phew. over the next few months, i made myself a leading expert on buck mckeon. - welcome back to our witnesses. any questions? - throwing myself into research,
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i watched everything i could find. - uh... [clears throat] - including this beautiful promotional video a local tv station presented to buck. - buck was born september 9, 1938 to howard and phyllis mckeon. - i learned so much about his roots, i could have worked for ancestry.com. - dad called me his "little buckaroo," and it just stuck. ballistic missile defense... - with the dulcet tones of buck mckeon haunting my dreams... - our nation cannot afford business as usual. - i hopped a flight to his old congressional district to investigate this suspect further... which is why i found myself in a nondescript strip mall in southern california. where are we? - we're in the santa clarita area, north of los angeles. and this is where howard and phil's western wear used to be. - this is patrice apodaca. she's a former journalist from the "los angeles times," whose beat included the santa clarita valley, home to a retail chain so well-known
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it appeared in a special tribute video. [twangy western music] - howard and phil's was a retail chain owned by the family of buck mckeon. all kinds of boots, shirts, ten-gallon hats-- and they did very well. they expanded in the '90s quite a bit all over the western states. i think they had up to 52 stores at one point. - wow. - yeah. and then things went south. they hit some bad times. - they hit some bad times. - yeah. - then what happened? - they filed for chapter 11 bankruptcy. - that's right. in 1996, buck mckeon's family business took advantage of that old american right-- the ability to get out from under your debt. wow. so why would his committee then deny students that right two years later?
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hey, dad. i got an a on my book report. that's cool. and i went for a walk in the woods and i didn't get a single flea or tick on me. you are just the best. -right? i'm great. -you are great. oh, brother. this flea and tick season, trust america's #1 pet pharmacy. chewy. i was stuck. unresolved depression symptoms were in my way. i needed more from my antidepressant. vraylar helped give it a lift. adding vraylar to an antidepressant... ...is clinically proven to help relieve overall depression symptoms... ...better than an antidepressant alone. and in vraylar clinical studies, most saw no substantial impact on weight. elderly dementia patients have increased risk of death or stroke. report unusual changes in behavior or suicidal thoughts. antidepressants can increase these in children and young adults. report fever, stiff muscles, or confusion, as these may be life-threatening, or uncontrolled muscle movements, which may be permanent. high blood sugar, which can lead to coma or death, weight gain, and high cholesterol may occur. movement dysfunction and restlessness are common side effects.
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- long before working for john mccain in washington d.c., conservative economist ike brannon worked for his dad, jim, back home in small town illinois. - my father was a bankruptcy lawyer, and i spent a couple of summers working for him. and i saw what he was doing was something that was really helping a lot of people. - in the 1970s, my father put an ad in the peoria "journal star" advertising his services at a price well below what other bankruptcy lawyers were charging at the time. - when my dad advertised about student loan relief, that made my dad a pariah in the peoria media. he was attacked on the local tv station. he was attacked on the peoria journal star. the local bankruptcy judge at the time referred to him in court as a shyster. - this is the same panic that led
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to that old 1970 study about whether students were gaming the system. they weren't, but that didn't stop the critics. - so my father got a lot of attention, not just in peoria, but throughout the state. and a couple of politicians expressed outrage that my father would dare advertise such a thing. and i think it did play a role in getting state congressmen to vote to tighten on the bankruptcy laws. - for years, jim and the family have worried that bankruptcy rights were eventually removed because of the ruckus he caused. - this is part of his legacy, i think. he really believed that there should not be any exception in the bankruptcy code for student debt. - and if you're going to exclude just this one debt, which for many people is by far the largest debt that they ever incur, then the whole purpose of bankruptcy is kind of negated. [dramatic music]
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- speaking of which, buck mckeon was ready to talk. i wasn't going to let anything stop me from holding his feet to the fire. i was angry and determined. and surprisingly hungry. [inquisitive music] ♪ satisfied with capturing some of the wall art, i prepared myself to finally meet the former congressman face to face. - who's blake? - i am. hi, mr. chairman. thank you for your time. - good to see you. - enough was enough. - man. - it was time to talk to this cowboy. i was ready to rake him through the coals. thank you so much for your time. you've had such a storied career. i'm looking at all these seals on the wall and these-- all these things you have.
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in 1998, what was your position at that time? - 1998, i was chairman of the subcommittee over post-secondary education, training, and lifelong learning. - something that keeps coming up is the higher education act, particularly the reauthorization in 1998. i think it's safe to say you had a pretty key part in that. and one of the offsets that we noticed in there was the provision to make student loans not dischargeable through bankruptcy. i'm wondering if you can recall where that policy idea originated and how you were able to get it in the bill? - i don't remember. in fact, that was a pretty big bill. and i don't-- i don't remember all of the--all of the details. - you don't recall that as anything that you were pushing? - it wasn't something--no. no. it wasn't something that i was championing or had strong feelings about one way or another. - how could it not be buck? all signs pointed to him. but would you agree that in your bill in '98--
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that's when they barred dischargeability for student loan debt? - like i say, i didn't remember that. but i would definitely say it would be good to-- to relook at that. - wait. what? - that is a problem. - you think so? - yeah. it's a real protection for people. i have understanding and compassion for people that have loans and--and people can't pay them off. and in fact, i think that will be one of the next big-- big things that the country has to face. but i think that's definitely a time to revisit. - what was happening? i'd spent months trying to track down who was responsible for this provision. - it's a tough thing. - and buck mckeon was suspect number one. now he was literally echoing my own thoughts back to me. - i just think its-- it would be a good thing to--
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to look at. - hold on. this could actually be a good thing. if buck mckeon, the key sponsor of the bill, seemed to want to change it, maybe the person i was searching for would too. but that mystery person was still a mystery. and i was back to square one. i'm saving with liberty mutual, mom. they customize your car insurance so you only pay for what you need. you could save $700 dollars just by switching. ooooh, let me put a reminder on my phone. on the top of the pile! oh. only pay for what you need. ♪ liberty. liberty. liberty. liberty. ♪ lila: before i was diagnosed, there was nothing really to worry about. and then when i was diagnosed, there was just such a big weight put on my shoulders. every night, i felt like maybe i won't wake up tomorrow.
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with my search ground to a halt, i started to wonder if this was all worth it. was anyone else wondering who was responsible for this obscure bankruptcy provision? - i do wonder why student loan debt is exempted from the normal bankruptcy protections. how did that happen? - uh...great minds? - 44 million americans-- - well, there was one other guy, but nobody was listening to him, either. - they cannot discharge this loan in bankruptcy. congress changed the bankruptcy law, making student loan debts non-dischargeable in bankruptcy. college student loan is with you for a lifetime. we need to restore dischargeability in bankruptcy for student loans once and for all. - senator durbin even introduced a bill to fix the bankruptcy laws. but that seemed to be going nowhere. - for goodness sakes, how can we ignore the crushing student loan debt across america? - who had caused this whole mess?
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i wracked my brain for clues from all the conversations i'd had over the past three years. - federal loans are handed over from the treasury directly to the department of education. [echoing] education... - we met with the department of ed officials-- [echoing] department of ed-- - you know, it's certainly worth seeing if there's anybody in the department of education who was around at that time. [echoing] department of education-- - my name is jamienne studley. and in 1998, i was acting general counsel of the u.s. department of education. - maybe jamienne could point me in the right direction. the 1998 higher education act made it so that federal loans were non-dischargeable in bankruptcy. do you recall that piece of it? - i recall it as a matter of law. i don't remember the debates about it. and we knew from the beginning that that was a problem. - yeah, and it's so relevant today, obviously, in just ways that we never could have foreseen. - but i think we teed up a lot of really important ideas in the bill.
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and i was very, very enthusiastic about income-based repayment approaches. - oh, yeah, income-based repayment-- i'd seen some of those fun videos. - payments are based on your income. so if you make little, you pay little. - with these helpful-looking programs, maybe there'd be no need for bankruptcy. just use the federal government's simple, convenient tools instead. - let's say you win the lottery, maybe just pay your loans off. but if your situation changes, this might lower your payments substantially. - lower monthly payments? now, that sounds like a deal. i hear about these income- contingent repayment plans, or income-based repayment plans, or a public service loan forgiveness-- what's the matter with those? - they are all cruel jokes, and the borrowers are the punch line. millions of borrowers who have tried for these various income- driven repayment programs have been disqualified for one reason or another. - and even if you do get into these programs,
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they still have ways to enrage you. - i had an income-based repayment plan. that was a very affordable payment, but the problem was that the balances kept growing because i wasn't paying enough to cover the interest. so you're actually really paying on a loan while the loan grows. and that really, really screwed with my mental health. i was so overwhelmed emotionally by this landslide that i was standing on. no matter what i did, it just kept sliding. - yeah, and in terms of the income-based repayment plans, putting aside whether it was a good idea, do you feel like it's been a success in terms of its implementation? - it has been a challenge to explain. it has some inherent weaknesses. i'm sure in retrospect, everyone involved wishes that-- that had gone more smoothly. [inquisitive music] ♪
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- with my search hitting a wall, i needed new leads and a drink. i feel--i feel a little stuck, honestly. what's--what's new on your end on this? - you know, i hit a bunch of people in my network. i knew a few people who were working on the committees at the time. - these are, like, aides who were working on the house education-- - house education and workforce committee, senate help committee-- you know, yielded some interesting results. so one, you know, we talked about how this is a big bipartisan bill, everyone wanted to see it go. but there was a quest to try to find--you know, pay-fors. - wait. hold on. what do you mean by pay-fors? what does that mean? - places where they could save money, cut federal spending, in order to pay for new spending on something else. - i see. - so it wasn't to drive this policy. it was, they were looking for money to pay for the bill. one of the places they go for ideas is the clinton administration. it turns out, the clinton administration actually included this bankruptcy change in their recommendations that they sent over to congress earlier in the process. so this idea actually came over from the clinton department of education. - the department of ed-- i knew it.
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- in sort of asking around, okay, so, like, who was at the administration? one name that's come up is-- it's got david longanecker-- he was the assistant secretary of education-- would have been involved in the discussions between congress and the administration, so. - so i got to talk to david longanecker? - yeah. - well, david longanecker was the person in higher ed policy. he was a huge player, high integrity, ethical, and incredibly smart. - david longanecker, l-o-n-g, a or e, n-e-c-k-e-r. he'd be a great guy to talk to. he's terrific. - we do think the system can work a lot better. so let me present to you at this time david longanecker, who is assistant secretary for post-secondary education. - thank you, mr. secretary. what i'll do is... - i watched hours of longanecker video. he seemed to have a particular focus. - and in addition, that if a student hasn't repaid their loan, we'll go after them.
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we've been doing a lot of that. we've been using wage garnishment, and we've been using irs refund collections in the program very successfully over the last few years. so we'll go after those students who default very aggressively and very quickly. we collect every dollar that can be collected. we pursue defaulted loans with a vengeance. we use collection agencies. we garnish your wages. - fast forwarding to the present, mr. longanecker retired from higher education to pursue his true love. he was now a commercial truck driver in colorado. [truck horn blares] health insurance commercial. take 1. cut! cut! one more. i got this. cut! take 37. cut! i don't actually play tennis. i'm just an actor in a commercial. most insurance companies don't know me. but humana does. when i was diagnosed with copd, they helped me to manage it and keep my medication costs low.
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so tell lawmakers: oppose ab886, because another new tax is the last thing we need. paid for by ccia. uspenseful music]r new tax is the last thing we need. paid for by ccia. ♪ even if longanecker wasn't our guy, i wondered, with such a long career in education, had he seen the damage this provision had caused,
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from spiraling college costs to massive debt and ruined lives? ♪ as i sat there preparing, i started to get nervous. like buck mckeon, was this another dead end? was i just wasting everyone's time? so let's--let's talk about a decision that was made in 1998 during the higher ed reauthorization. talking to the congressional staffers from the time with respect, specifically, to the provision that barred student loans from being discharged through bankruptcy-- - sure. - what they said essentially happened is that there were a number of programs that people wanted. and so they went to the education department and you for ideas. and then that's where kind of that idea developed.
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does that sound about right? - i think that's fair representation of the time. - okay. it was now clear. we had finally found our man. - got it. so it's 20 years since the 1998 higher ed reauthorization act. - yeah. - and the bankruptcy provision, in particular-- how much time have you spent reflecting on that decision that you guys made back then? - i have--i don't-- it wasn't the most dominant thing i've thought about since then. i have in many conversations, defended what i think was a reasonable decision, that these are obligations that people make. and that when people accept an obligation, they have a responsibility to attend to that. and if students actually defaulted, they weren't-- they simply weren't acting in good faith. - so you just made a point that, you know, people should meet their obligations, like you said. but given not what the intention was,
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but what the result has been 20 years in, does that give you some pause and make you think maybe it is worth, you know, reopening that option for bankruptcy? - no. i can understand why people would come at that. but that's why we created the income contingent repayment plans, a failsafe for the students who were serious about their loans. - but there are millions of people who applied, got kicked off because they-- there are all sorts of reasons. we have to get into all of them. but we are now 20 years in, and we've seen what happens when it's implemented. does that concern you? - well, yes. but the answer i don't think is to go to a system that i don't think has the right sets of responsibilities. i mean, i think that income contingent repayment is a more reasonable response than simply discharging the loan in bankruptcy. - okay. but do you believe in bankruptcy in general, just as a general-- - sure. - i mean, it sounds like you-- - sure. i do. no. i believe in bankruptcy as a general provision
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for people who really get hammered, give them a chance to start over. - right. look, we have pretty much dischargeability for bankruptcy for almost any debt you could have. you and i can go to vegas tonight, and maybe we should, lose $10 million, and then we have a chance to discharge it through bankruptcy. the one exception is people with student loan debt struggling as a result of that. and so are you sympathetic to the point that these students have been singled out? - well, i guess one could look at it in that fashion. but you also don't want something-- i mean, you mentioned the borrowers. most of those are repaying their debt. and they're doing so, not comfortably, nobody is-- - they're struggling. yeah, a lot of them are struggling. - they're struggling, at least in their own mind, they're struggling. [dramatic musical sting] and--but most of them are repaying their debt. default rates are higher than they've been, but they still aren't terribly high, and-- - i think--sorry to interject, but i think it is possible
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for someone to have a tremendous amount of debt, not default, and still be struggling as a result of that. and for what it's worth, tuition, as you well know, is triple what it was back then, but wages have stagnated. does that interest you at all? - yes, but not convincingly. - look, these people are paying their loans well into their 20s, 30s, and 40s, often even into their 50s right now. they're not buying homes as a result. they're buying cars later. they're starting families later. and powell, the fed reserve chair said there could be some macroeconomic problems that occur as a result of that. so do you think it's working? - i think it's--yeah. i mean, you've got 44 million borrowers. [inquisitive music] and so i think it works. - i had met the man behind the bankruptcy rule, and he was not backing down. - i still believe that the-- the right incentive is to say, there's a safeguard here. but you have a major responsibility to repay your loan. - for the next hour, he offered a range of opinions
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to support his position. - my daughter paid off her entire student loan. she was able--and she was in the income contingent program because her dad knew about it. - not everyone has you for a dad. a lot of people don't know about it. - i mean, we have an awful lot of students who are in never-never land today. but on average, their debt isn't all that substantial. - he concluded with a final thought that encapsulated his position more than anything else-- - for the ones who put themselves in exceptional debt, they were the damn fools, not the federal government. and they should accept the responsibility for that foolishness. - thanks so much. appreciate it. - my pleasure. - okay. - believe it or not, he was right. this mess was caused by damn fools. only it wasn't decent people like vivian, alan, or marcella, but the damn fools in washington
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only pay for what you need. the good news-- there's an easy way to get help with your student debt. look what i found flipping channels one day. - hey, i'm michael torpey. my show "paid off" is the only game show working to end the student debt crisis. - if you can't get on the show, i saw another easy fix on "ellen." - give you $50,000-- - oh, my god! - well... all: [chanting] cancel student debt. - there was always that cancellation idea. - somebody has to foot the bill. - if you watched a certain network, you might think the only ones who supported that idea were crunchy liberal activists like this hippie. - [laughs] no, i'm not a hippie. you know, as i got older in life, i wish i'd been one earlier. - this is wayne johnson. and his background is not what you'd expect. - i was with the trump administration. - that's right. under trump, wayne oversaw the federal government's
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student loan program. and from his position, he could see just how insanely far gone the system had become. what wayne did next would become a big news story. - a top official in the federal student loan program resigning this week, calling the system, "fundamentally broken." - he quit. and the conservative former trump official hit the media to unveil his plan to cancel student debt. - he would forgive more debt than plans proposed by democratic presidential contenders like elizabeth warren. - hearing a republican say he believed in debt cancellation got some attention. - if we don't fix it, what will happen? - well, if we don't fix it, we're gonna continue to have an ever-increasing destruction of the fabric of america. i mean, it's that profound. - was wayne sure he wasn't a hippie? - no, i'm not a hippie. i'm a pretty straightforward guy. [upbeat percussive music] - you guys were told, this is what you need to do to get ahead. and if you do it though, oh, actually, you're not ahead.
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how does that make you feel that that promise is false? - well, the promise is false, but the solution is true. - okay. - for sure. - braxton and wen joined the debt collective, a group pushing for student debt cancellation with a caveat. - i mean, we advocate for full cancellation. but, like, if the president were to cancel all student debt tomorrow, we'd have some student debt next semester. and so how do we figure that out? how do we solve that problem? the answer is free college. - our parents, grandparents' generation, they didn't go to free college. both: yeah. - with immigrant parents, it was like, they work their whole lives to send their kids to school. and we grew up, like, very rural china. and the thing that they always say is, like, there is more chances to thrive in the u.s. so the paying of school wasn't a problem they were thinking about. they were like, we're going to do this no matter what. like, whatever it takes, we're going to pay for whatever school i get into. - and the only way to pay for college, unless you're rich, is with a loan. - yeah. - meanwhile, as the cancellation discussion
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heated up, senator durbin finally seemed to be making progress on his bill to restore bankruptcy protections. - so i look forward to working with my colleagues across the aisle to pass the fresh start through bankruptcy act. this is an issue that i have dealt with for a long time. ♪ - i'm gonna take you to my favorite coffee shop. - oh, cool. i check back in with alan on this latest development that could finally end his 17-year pursuit. - we have a bipartisan bill, s.2598. dick durbin is the sponsor. - wow. - today, i'm introducing a bill with senator cornyn. i thank him for joining me in this bipartisan effort. - this is an important issue. and i think our bill, the fresh start through bankruptcy act will provide an important-- important relief to students. - our bill would restore the ability of student loan borrowers to discharge federal student loans after a waiting period of ten years.
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- this ten-year window would help students without encouraging strategic bankruptcy. - uh, there's a ten-year waiting period, which is not perfect, but that is where the solution to this problem begins. - so now that the bill had bipartisan support, it might actually have a chance of passing. right? is that bill moving at all? is anything happening with that as far as you know? - uh... well, i don't know. - i mean, you're the foremost authority on this. - i don't know. - okay. - i think we're close. but i don't know. i got to get some cat food. - i didn't blame alan for feeling nervous about it. after nearly two decades of fighting for change, i wouldn't want to get my hopes up, either. - oh, sh--sorry about that. - with a bipartisan bill introduced,
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it was time to work every connection i had to get a meeting with my former boss. so we are in washington d.c. now. we're headed to the capitol. we're going to see senator schumer today. and this is the guy who basically can help actually solve this. he's the senate majority leader. and no one gets access to talk to a senator like this, and so i feel fortunate to be able to have that opportunity, but it feels like trying to ask questions for all those people who are going through this and get answers to these questions that affect all of them. so that's sort of what's going through my head right now is basically, don't screw this up. moving forward with node- positive breast cancer is overwhelming. but i never just found my way; i made it. and did all i could to prevent recurrence. verzenio reduces the risk of recurrence of hr-positive, her2-negative, node-positive, early breast cancer with a high chance of returning, as determined by your doctor when added to hormone therapy. hormone therapy works outside the cell... while verzenio works inside
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this was my chance to get the senate majority leader on board with my mission. [suspenseful music] ♪ - hello. good mask. - okay.
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- i had just 20 minutes with the senator, and i needed to use the time productively. - okay, we got to get moving, guy, we're taking too long. - [indistinct] put in your pocket right here. - okay. thank you. - it's going to be three or four questions, easy stuff. - okay, good. - okay, senator, there's 45 million people with student debt in this country. what was the tipping point for you? what was the turning point where you realized, this is an epic crisis? - whenever i walked around new york state, not only young people, but middle-aged people, grandparents were talking about the burden of debt. "i didn't take the job i wanted because of student debt. "i didn't get married because of student debt. i had to move somewhere because of student debt." it discombobulated people's lives in a significant way. - for doing the right thing-- this is people-- we tell them go, work hard, go to college, get an education, and then boom. - exactly. you know, when i went to college, i didn't come from a wealthy home. i worked my way through school.
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but i got out of school debt-free. and what's happened over the years is, this thing is just spun out of control. i've been pushing president biden to do this. - to do what? when you say to do this, what do you mean? - to cancel $50,000 of student debt. he can do it with the flick of a pen. no legislation, no going to mitch mcconnell, who isn't for this anyway, but just doing it on his own. i'm gonna wear this mask on the floor of the senate until president biden signs that document in the white house that says $50,000 of student debt is canceled. - you're the senate majority leader, very powerful person. why do you want to have the president do it instead of going legislatively? are there are certain roadblocks... - well, yes. - that make it harder? - in the senate, you would need 60 votes to cancel the student debt. that would mean getting some republican votes. and the republicans-- we haven't found any republican supporters. frankly, we don't have every single democrat on board for this. so if i had to put it on the senate floor, it would be a struggle, and it might not pass. - well, i knew about one proposal that already
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had bipartisan support. senator durbin has a bill that would make it so that student debt can finally be discharged through bankruptcy the way every other-- if you're delinquent on your income taxes-- - you know, the debt-- the debt-- the deck is stacked against the kids, against the students. - wait a minute. had durbin not lobbied him about the bill? yeah, so let me ask you this. so senator durbin has this bill that would reverse that provision. - hey, listen, it's something i would obviously look at. - i had to get this on the senator's radar. just to tell you, the 1998 higher education act passed unanimously. the higher education act, good bill-- at the very last minute, someone snuck in a two-line provision that said you can't discharge your student debt through bankruptcy. - really? - and we found-- - from some bank. - we were trying to figure out where it came from. - who? - it turns out the person whose idea it was, was a bureaucrat at the department of education. and that guy now is a truck driver in colorado. - oh, what a great thing. - so i mean, i thought i'd tell you that. but knowing what you know about d.c., does that surprise you, that story, that somebody like that-- - it still does.
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yeah, something like that, because that's really weird. - yeah. thank you so much for your time. - okay. let's take this off. - appreciate it. - i'm running late for my lunch. - so senator durbin has this bill that would reverse that provision. so now, you would be able to get rid of that debt through bankruptcy. - yeah. - and senators cornyn and hawley just joined and said they would be for that. so that's got a bipartisan-- - yeah, thanks. - okay, terrific. - thanks again. appreciate it. - i'll email your staff about the bankruptcy thing. - yeah, thank you. - sir? - and good to see you too. appreciate it. this was big. i couldn't wait to call alan back in wisconsin. how you doing? - we met with schumer. - yeah. i asked him about bankruptcy. do you know about this bill that durbin's got that, like, cornyn and hawley are on right now? and he didn't seem to fully be aware of the bill.
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- well, listen. he seemed very amenable. he was into it on the merits and the substance and all that kind of stuff. i think he's gonna like, look into it. - well, listen. it's on his radar now. and i'm gonna send it to his team tonight. and it's better off than we were three hours ago. [inquisitive music] ♪ - not long after my meeting with senator schumer... - he continued to bang the drum for cancellation... - at a press conference on student debt. - but what most didn't notice was a response he gave in the post-conference q&a. "it's outrageous," he said, "that other people get to declare bankruptcy, but students can't." this was exciting. with real momentum on the bankruptcy issue,
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- oh, i saw it. - my tail goes bonkers for treats at great prices. sorry about the vase. - [announcer] save more on what they love with everyday great prices at chewy. - right here. please, sir. - [announcer] save more on what they love watch your step. - nice to meet you. i'm blake. - well, thanks for sitting with us. we are focused on student debt, particularly the issue of bankruptcy. the 1998 higher education act, there was a one or two-line provision that was snuck in. and you were in congress at the time. do you remember that? - it really was not even publicized. it was not brought to the attention of most members. it wasn't until it was all over, you look back and say, oh, my god. two lines in a bill changed the lives of millions of americans. - you are the person who has been pushing for a solution to this. you have a bill that would essentially reverse this. - yes. - does this bill have a chance of actually getting passed? - if you take a look at the composition of the senate,
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and you look for odd couples, certainly, dick durbin and john cornyn of texas would be an odd couple. i like john, but we don't agree on much. but we put a bill together. it says there would reach a point after ten years of your student loan, where you can discharge it in bankruptcy. - now, you mentioned senator cornyn, and i think that's important. senator hawley, i understand, is also supporting this bill. so you have a real bipartisan group of senators that you've put together. do we have the votes for this? - first things first-- committees. the bill has to go through the committee. - i wanted to get a pledge from the senator that he'd move the bill to the committee asap. bringing it to the committee-- you're the chair. - luckily, i'm chairman of the senate judiciary committee, and john cornyn sits on the committee, hawley as well. so the three of us is a starting point. we need 12 votes to report it out of the committee. - and you're saying you're determined to do that this session? - yes. - that's terrific. - easier said than done in the senate. when you say you want to bring an idea to the floor,
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then we have to beg schumer to give us a niche, a piece of the calendar so that we can call the bill. it takes some time, you know? - i don't know if you know this already. we spoke to schumer very recently. and he said he's now very interested in this. and he seemed open to it. i don't think it was really on his radar. and then just a couple of days ago, he was quoted saying, "oh, absolutely. "people who have student debt should be able to discharge it through bankruptcy." so i'm giving you a tip that i think that if you get it through your committee, his eyes are more open on this bill than i think he used to be. - we absolutely need him. he decides which bills come before the senate. and his personal commitment is essential. - i don't want to give people false hope. but do you really think there's a chance? - i think there is a chance. and we're going to try everything legitimately possible to move this bill through the senate this year. - thank you very much. - thank you. - i appreciate it. thanks for your time. your discussions with schumer might be different, but when i met with him in november, he was like, oh, i'm definitely open to it, and i got him the information.
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and on friday, i was shocked. i read this article. it said schumer was asked about bankruptcy for student loans. and he's--and he was-- the talk-- he was right on message, whereas when i met him a couple of months ago, he wasn't. so i'll send it to teresa if that's okay. - okay. thank you, senator. thanks so much, teresa. - thanks [indistinct]. - awesome. thank you. - something major just happened. - yeah. - i don't know if that was evident. probably sounded like a boring conversation, but-- i knew things moved at a glacial pace in the senate, but this felt like actual progress. - hello? - alan, it's blake. - i just finished talking with durbin. and i have a pretty big update. i said, i think schumer is convinced. and he said, he pledged to me, that he will bring it to a committee this session. - stuff is happening. ♪ [marching band playing "america the beautiful"]
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♪ - we are poor because of our student loans. - i mean, it makes me angry. ["you're a grand old flag"] ♪ singers: ♪ you're a grand old flag ♪ you're a high-flying flag ♪ and forever in peace may you wave ♪ ♪ you're the emblem of
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♪ the land i love ♪ the home of the free and the brave ♪ ♪ every heart beats true for the... ♪ - here's all the paperwork from sallie mae, deferment requests that were rejected. fuck off. i'm protesting. i'm burning it all. singers: ♪ keep your eyes on the grand old flag ♪ ♪ every heart beats true ♪ for the red, white, and blue ♪ ♪ where there's never a boast or brag ♪ ♪ should old acquaintance be forgot ♪ ♪ keep your eyes on the grand old flag ♪ ♪ every heart beats true ♪ for the red, white, and blue ♪ ♪ where there's never a boast or brag ♪ ♪ should old acquaintance be forgot ♪ ♪ keep your eyes on ♪ the grand old flag
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[cheers and applause] - hey, hey, hey! - all right. - it worked out again. - anytime we start together and end together, we celebrate. [applause] [inquisitive music] ♪
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